Senate Agriculture Committee Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow said the “era of direct payments” for U.S. farmers is over, signaling the end to a certain type of crop subsidy in the next farm bill.
Stabenow, a Michigan Democrat, said at a committee hearing today that farm policy should focus on crop insurance and tools that “help producers who have suffered a loss on the crops they actually grow.” Direct payments are a form of subsidy that farmers collect based on historical production, regardless of commodity prices.
Today’s hearing in Washington was called to examine risk- management tools available to farmers as lawmakers prepare to draft a new farm bill, which will authorize U.S. Department of Agriculture programs, including crop subsidies and nutrition initiatives, for the next five years. The current law expires Sept. 30.
Stabenow said strengthening crop-insurance programs will be one of her priorities in the new legislation. Last year, federal programs paid out over $10 billion in claims for lost revenue and production because of natural disasters, Michael Scuse, the USDA’s acting undersecretary for farm and foreign agricultural services, told the committee.